John Carew Rolfe: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
m stub sort |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''John Carew Rolfe, Ph.D.''' (1859- ) was an [[United States|American]] classical scholar, son of [[William James Rolfe|William J. Rolfe]], born in [[Newburyport, Massachusetts|Newburyport, Mass.]] He graduated from [[Harvard University|Harvard]] in [[1881]] and from [[Cornell University|Cornell]] (Ph.D.) in [[1885]]. He taught at [[Cornell University|Cornell]] ([[1882]]-[[1885|85]]), at [[Harvard University|Harvard]] ([[1889]]-[[1890|90]]), at the [[University of Michigan]], and at the [[University of Pennsylvania]]. He was professor in [[1907]]-[[1908|08]] at the [[American School of Classical Studies]] in [[Rome]]. In [[1910]]-[[1911|11]], he was president of the [[American Philological Association]]. |
'''John Carew Rolfe, Ph.D.''' (1859- ) was an [[United States|American]] classical scholar, son of [[William James Rolfe|William J. Rolfe]], born in [[Newburyport, Massachusetts|Newburyport, Mass.]] He graduated from [[Harvard University|Harvard]] in [[1881]] and from [[Cornell University|Cornell]] (Ph.D.) in [[1885]]. He taught at [[Cornell University|Cornell]] ([[1882]]-[[1885|85]]), at [[Harvard University|Harvard]] ([[1889]]-[[1890|90]]), at the [[University of Michigan]], and at the [[University of Pennsylvania]]. He was professor in [[1907]]-[[1908|08]] at the [[American School of Classical Studies]] in [[Rome]]. In [[1910]]-[[1911|11]], he was president of the [[American Philological Association]]. |
||
{{academic-bio-stub}} |
{{US-academic-bio-stub}} |
||
{{US-bio-stub}} |
|||
[[Category:Cornell alumni|Rolfe, John Carew]] |
[[Category:Cornell alumni|Rolfe, John Carew]] |
||
[[Category:Harvard alumni|Rolfe, John Carew]] |
[[Category:Harvard alumni|Rolfe, John Carew]] |
Revision as of 02:15, 14 February 2006
John Carew Rolfe, Ph.D. (1859- ) was an American classical scholar, son of William J. Rolfe, born in Newburyport, Mass. He graduated from Harvard in 1881 and from Cornell (Ph.D.) in 1885. He taught at Cornell (1882-85), at Harvard (1889-90), at the University of Michigan, and at the University of Pennsylvania. He was professor in 1907-08 at the American School of Classical Studies in Rome. In 1910-11, he was president of the American Philological Association.